/ 40.02222; 44.91500 Khosrov is a town in the Ararat Province of Armenia. Khosrov Forest State Reserve Ararat Province Khosrov at GEOnet Names Server...
Khosrov II (known in Roman sources as Chosroes, died 258), also known as Khosrov the Brave was an Armenian king from the Arsacid dynasty in the mid-third...
Khosrov Zakarian or Khosrov Mkhargrdzeli was Georgian-Armenian landholder during the 11th century in Armenian Kingdom of Tashir-Dzoraget and Kingdom of...
Khosrov Forest State Reserve (Armenian: Խոսրովի անտառ պետական արգելոց, romanized: Khosrovi antarr petakan argelots'), is a nature reserve in Ararat Province...
Khosrov III the Small (Khosrov III Kotak; Kotak means "little, short, small") was the king of Arsacid Armenia c. 330–338/339. Khosrov was the son and...
Khosrov I (Parthian: 𐭇𐭅𐭎𐭓𐭅; fl. second half 2nd c. - first half 3rd c., died 217) was a Parthian prince who served as a Roman client king of Armenia...
Khosrov bey Alipasha bey oghlu Sultanov (Azerbaijani: خسرو بگ علی پاشا بگ اوغلی سلطانوف, Xosrov bəy Əlipaşa bəy oğlu Sultanov; 1879 – 1943), also spelled...
Khosrov IV (Armenian: Խոսրով Դ) was a noble of the Arsacid dynasty who served as the Sasanian client king of Armenia from 385 until 389. The exact origins...
Khosrov Meliki Harutyunyan (Armenian: Խոսրով Մելիքի Հարությունյան; born 30 May 1948) is an Armenian politician who served as the Prime Minister of Armenia...
II, c. 190 Khosrov I of Armenia, 198–217 Khosrov II of Armenia, c. 252 Khosrov III the Small, 330–339 Khosrov IV of Armenia, 387–389 Khosrov of Andzev...
Khosrov of Andzev (died 964) was the father of Gregory of Narek, a tenth century poet. His two sons, Grigor and Hovhannes, studied at Narek monastery...
Parthia (as Vologases V) 190–208 Khosrov I, c. 190–214/216, son of Vologases II Tiridates II, 217–252, son of Khosrov I Hormizd-Ardashir, 252/253– c. 270...
Syriac as Turadatis and in Latin as Tiridates. Tiridates III was the son of Khosrov II of Armenia, the latter being assassinated in 252 by a Parthian agent...
Vologases II assumed the Parthian throne and named his son Khosrov I to the Armenian throne. Khosrov I was subsequently captured by the Romans, who installed...
Christianity in the early fourth century. Anak is said to have killed King Khosrov of Armenia at the incitement of the Sasanians, leading to his own murder...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
acceded the Parthian throne, he passed the Armenian throne to his son Khosrov I (r. 191–217). Vologases' reign was marked by war with the Roman Empire...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Pacorus Sohaemus Vologases II Khosrov I Tiridates II Hormizd-Ardashir Narseh Khosrov II Tiridates (III) Tiridates III (IV) Khosrov III Tiran Arshak II Pap Varazdat...
Armenian or Kurdish origin. The first historically traceable Zakarid was Khosrov Zakarian in the early 11th century. During the next hundred years the Zakarids...